• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Striving for Equity : Healthcare in Sri Lanka from Independence to the Millennium, 1948–2000
  • Contributor: Jones, Margaret [Author]
  • Published: [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar]: Orient Blackswan, 2020
  • Published in: New Perspectives in South Asian History
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (156 p.)
  • Language: English
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: History ; Public health & preventive medicine
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: English
  • Description: Focusing on the period from independence in 1948 to the millennium this book is an historical analysis of the process by which Sri Lanka became a model of how a nation with limited resources could nevertheless achieve health indicators on a par with the developed world through the development of a primary healthcare system. In so doing it had to interact and negotiate with global health actors such as the World Health Organization while maintaining its own agency. Based on a close reading of original archival sources it is an in-depth exploration of these questions viewed through a series of case studies which highlight both the successes which contributed to this outcome and the inadequacies of those efforts when seen at the micro level. A primary health care infrastructure is an essential prerequisite for the delivery of preventive health care; how this was developed and delivered to the entire population forms the first substantive chapter. Since the incidence of tuberculosis in a community serves as a marker of a country’s achievement in meeting basic needs and establishing social justice there follows an examination of policies to control TB. The most vulnerable group in a nation are its children and they are also the source of a nation’s future human capital. Two chapters discuss children’s health; firstly the problem of childhood malnutrition and secondly the implementation of the successful immunization programme. Demographic change means a double disease burden of non-communicable diseases alongside communicable diseases and how this considerable challenge is met is the subject of the last chapter. Furthermore these topics enable a discussion of the significance and problems of an international policy transfer to less well-resourced environments
  • Access State: Open Access